Your answer depends on the nature of the building where you want to establish the number of parking spaces.
Commercial buildings will have a different number than residential buildings, and the size of the building and its location will determine the exact number.
Your local city or county hall of records clerk who works with zoning issues, can answer your question, given a precise address.
Review Texas law about handicapped access to condominiums. Your association may be obligated to provide handicap access, but it may not be required to make the parking spaces available at exactly the place you want them. It's a good idea for you -- assuming that you are a handicapped owner -- to work this out with your board of directors.
PARKING SPACESNumber of required designated parking spaces for the disabled:TOTAL PARKING SPACES ACCESSIBLE PARKING SPACES REQUIRED "VAN ACCESSIBLE" SPACE REQUIRED1 TO 251126 TO 502151 TO 753176 TO 10041101 TO 15051151 TO 20061
You must have a handicapped space for each unit specifically intended for a handicapped person. Other wise, one handicapped space per forty normal parking spaces.
You are allowed to park in handicapped parking spaces.
PARKING SPACESNumber of required designated parking spaces for the disabled:TOTAL PARKING SPACES ACCESSIBLE PARKING SPACES REQUIRED "VAN ACCESSIBLE" SPACE REQUIRED1 TO 251126 TO 502151 TO 753176 TO 10041101 TO 15051151 TO 20061
Definitely yes. In many cases (such as the building I live in) the residents have to pay a monthly or yearly parking fee to the landlord or owner. Some of them may be designated handicapped parking spaces. A guest has no right to occupy the residents' paid-for parking spots. A private residential parking lot is private property, and the landlord or owner has the right to restrict parking as they see fit. A guest, even with a handicapped placard, runs the risk of having their car towed away if they park in a space reserved for residents.
The standard size of hanidcaipped parking is usually 15-290 spaces in the u.s. and about 10 spaces in the uk. hope ive answered your question!
Yes. The public parking lots of residential buildings are required to have a certain percentage (or minimum number) of disabled parking spaces based on the number of dwelling units and/or the number of available parking spaces.
Bipolar disorder, by itself, would not qualify a person for a handicapped parking card; handicapped spaces are reserved for people who have physical disabilities that make walking difficult or impossible.It is possible for someone to have bipolar disorder and a qualifying physical medical condition, however, in which case they may receive a parking card if a doctor recommends one.
ha-ha :) I never thought about that. Maybe some non-handicapped people got mad because the handicapped have the "good" parking spots so they wanted "good" locations for the cart returns. I think they should have a cart return beside each handicapped parking spots and then the rest wherever they please between all of the other parking spaces. (Why would someone get mad over not having a "good" parking spot? so instead of walking a short distance further they steal a handicapped parking space? I don't know, we live in such an odd community.)
No they don't have to, nor is anyone required to provide them
The actual parking space or the parking decal ?? The parking space istelf has to be marked on the ground and a sign stating that it is a handicapped area - both have to be present. The parking decal is also assigned to the handicapped drivers license - so by having a police officer run the parking decal it will state who the driver is that has been assigned that decal.